Simulation studies of laser-irradiated additive-manufactured foams
ORAL
Abstract
In the indirect drive approach to inertial confinement fusion a low-Z shell containing DT fuel is compressed by x-rays produced by a laser-heated high-Z surrounding enclosure (hohlraum). The motion of the hohlraum walls introduces drive symmetry swings that may degrade the capsule performance. In low-density gas-filled hohlraums (currently the focus of ignition experiments), wall motion may completely or partially inhibit the propagation of the laser beams, especially those depositing the energy at the mid-plane of the hohlraum. To mitigate this behavior new hohlraum designs are using low-density foams as a substitute for high-density gas fills. However, standard modelling of foams has shown significant disagreement with experimental observations [1]. We show that using modern computer architectures (multi-processors) coupled to a simple statistical representation of a foam goes a long way to bridging the modelling disparities. Additional benefit can be leveraged from the use of structured foams produced by additive manufacturing (AM). We survey a variety of AM foam configurations to find an optimal design for hohlraum experiments.
[1] S.Y. Gus’kov et al., Quantum Electron., 24 696 (1997).
*Prepared by LLNL under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344
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Presenters
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J. L. L Milovich
- Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
- LLNL